If you love baklava but are trying to stay low carb, this recipe is going to make your day. These keto baklava bites have all the nutty, sweet, spiced flavors of the original but without the sugar and phyllo dough.
Traditional baklava is loaded with sugar syrup and layers of high carb pastry. Delicious, sure, but not exactly keto friendly. This version swaps all of that out for ingredients that actually work on a low carb diet.

Each bite has a buttery almond flour shell filled with a mix of spiced nuts and soaked in a sugar free syrup. They come out crispy, sweet, and seriously addictive.
The recipe makes 24 mini bites using a mini muffin tin, so they are perfect for sharing or keeping in the fridge for whenever you need a little treat.
They are surprisingly easy to put together too. If you can press dough into a muffin tin and mix nuts in a bowl, you can make these.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
Real Baklava Flavor Without the Carbs – Traditional baklava is loaded with sugar and phyllo dough but these bites capture that same nutty honey-like taste while staying keto friendly.

Three Different Nuts for Amazing Flavor – The mix of walnuts and pecans and pistachios gives every bite a rich and complex nuttiness you won’t get from single-nut desserts.
Warm Spices That Make It Special – The combo of cinnamon and cardamom and cloves brings that authentic Middle Eastern baklava flavor that most keto desserts just don’t have.
Recipe Ingredients
For the Nut Filling
- 1 cup Walnuts, finely chopped
- 1/2 cup Pecans, finely chopped
- 1/4 cup Pistachios, finely chopped
- 2 tbsp Granulated Erythritol
- 1 tsp Ground Cinnamon
- 1/4 tsp Ground Cardamom
- Pinch of Ground Cloves
For the Pastry
- 1 1/2 cups Almond Flour
- 1/4 cup Coconut Flour
- 2 tbsp Powdered Erythritol
- 1/4 tsp Salt
- 1/4 cup Butter, cold and cubed
- 1 Large Egg
- 1/4 cup Butter, melted (for brushing)
For the Syrup
- 1/4 cup Water
- 1/4 cup Granulated Allulose
- 1 tbsp Lemon Juice
- 1 tsp Rose Water (optional)
- 1 tsp Vanilla Extract
How To Make
Step 1
Preheat your oven to 325°F. Grease a 24-cup mini muffin tin. In a bowl, toss together the finely chopped walnuts, pecans, pistachios, 2 tbsp erythritol, cinnamon, cardamom, and ground cloves.
Step 2
For the pastry, combine the almond flour, coconut flour, powdered erythritol, and salt in a bowl. Cut in the cold cubed butter using your fingers until the mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Add the egg and mix until a soft dough forms.
Step 3
Divide the dough into 24 equal pieces. Press each piece into a mini muffin cup, forming a thin shell that comes up the sides. Brush the inside of each shell with melted butter.
Step 4
Fill each pastry shell generously with the nut mixture, pressing it down lightly. Brush the tops with the remaining melted butter.
Step 5
Bake for 18 to 22 minutes until the pastry edges are golden and the nut tops are toasted and fragrant.
Step 6
While the bites bake, make the syrup. Combine the water and allulose in a small saucepan over medium heat. Bring to a simmer and cook for 5 minutes until slightly thickened. Remove from heat and stir in the lemon juice, rose water if using, and vanilla extract.
Step 7
As soon as the baklava bites come out of the oven, spoon a little syrup over each one, letting it soak into the nut filling and pastry. Let them cool completely in the tin before removing. They get crispier and more flavorful as they sit.

Tips
Use Allulose for the Syrup, Not Erythritol
The recipe calls for allulose in the syrup for a reason. Allulose dissolves smoothly and stays syrupy as it cools, just like real honey or sugar syrup would.
If you swap in erythritol for the syrup, it will recrystallize as it cools and you’ll end up with a gritty, crunchy coating instead of that sticky, soaked-in sweetness that makes baklava so good.
Erythritol works fine in the nut filling and pastry dough where texture matters less, but for the syrup, stick with allulose.
Keep the Dough Thin in the Muffin Cups
When you press the dough into the mini muffin cups, make it as thin and even as you can. If the walls or bottom are too thick, the pastry won’t bake all the way through and you’ll get a soft, doughy center instead of a crisp shell.

Almond flour dough doesn’t behave like regular phyllo or puff pastry. It needs to be thin to actually crisp up during baking. Aim for about 1/8 inch thick all around.
If the dough keeps sticking to your fingers while pressing, wet your fingertips slightly with cold water. It makes shaping way easier.
Don’t Skip the Melted Butter Brushing
Brushing melted butter on the inside of each shell before filling and on top of the nuts before baking is what gives these bites their golden, crispy finish. Without it, the pastry stays pale and the nuts on top don’t toast properly.
Use a small pastry brush and make sure you get the butter into the edges where the dough meets the muffin tin. That’s where it tends to stay soft if there’s no butter helping it crisp up.
More Recipes
- Keto Churro Chaffles
- Low Carb Caramel Pecan Clusters
- Low Carb Cinnamon Sugar Donut Holes
- Low Carb Maple Pecan Blondies
- Low Carb Pecan Pie Bars
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does this recipe use allulose for the syrup instead of erythritol?
Allulose is used in the syrup because it behaves much more like real sugar when dissolved in liquid. It stays smooth and syrupy as it cools, which is exactly what you want for soaking into the baklava bites.
Erythritol tends to recrystallize as it cools, so if you used it in the syrup it would turn gritty and crunchy instead of sticky and soaky. That’s why erythritol works fine in the dry nut filling and dough, but allulose is the better pick for the syrup.
Keto Baklava Bites
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Preheat your oven to 325°F. Grease a 24-cup mini muffin tin. In a bowl, toss together the finely chopped walnuts, pecans, pistachios, 2 tbsp erythritol, cinnamon, cardamom, and ground cloves.
- For the pastry, combine the almond flour, coconut flour, powdered erythritol, and salt in a bowl. Cut in the cold cubed butter using your fingers until the mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Add the egg and mix until a soft dough forms.
- Divide the dough into 24 equal pieces. Press each piece into a mini muffin cup, forming a thin shell that comes up the sides. Brush the inside of each shell with melted butter.
- Fill each pastry shell generously with the nut mixture, pressing it down lightly. Brush the tops with the remaining melted butter.
- Bake for 18 to 22 minutes until the pastry edges are golden and the nut tops are toasted and fragrant.
- While the bites bake, make the syrup. Combine the water and allulose in a small saucepan over medium heat. Bring to a simmer and cook for 5 minutes until slightly thickened. Remove from heat and stir in the lemon juice, rose water if using, and vanilla extract.
- As soon as the baklava bites come out of the oven, spoon a little syrup over each one, letting it soak into the nut filling and pastry. Let them cool completely in the tin before removing. They get crispier and more flavorful as they sit.